The trial court granted the 12(b)(6) motion on the ground that Jones v. New Hanover Hospital,
In Bost this Court expressly recognized for the first time the doctrine of “corporate negligence,” which involves the violation of a duty owed directly by the hospital to the patient, as a basis for liability apart and distinct from respondeat superior. The Bost opinion clearly stated, however, that the doctrine of corporate negligence had been implicitly accepted and applied in a number of previous decisions. Despite this wording in Bost, defendant maintains the court below was correct in concluding that Jones limits the liability for corporate negligence to causes of action arising after 5 February 1980, the filing date of Bost.
In Jones, the plaintiff sought to hold the defendant hospital liable under a theory of corporate negligence for acts occurring in 1961.
Prior to 20 January 1967, a charitable hospital in North Carolina was liable to a patient for injuries caused by the negligence of the hospital’s employees or servants only (1) if the hospital was negligent in the hiring or retention of the employee or servant or (2) if the hospital provided defective equipment. The doctrine of charitable immunity for hospitals along with its exceptions was abolished effective 20 January 1967 by the North Carolina Supreme Court’s decision in Rabon v. Hospital,269 N.C. 1 ,152 S.E. 2d 485 (1967). (Citations omitted.)
The plaintiff in Jones conceded that defendant hospital was entitled to raise the defense of charitable immunity in that action. The issue therefore presented in Jones was
*505 whether, under the pre-Rabon decisions, North Carolina recognized a doctrine of corporate negligence in suits by patients against charitable hospitals separate and distinct from the two well-recognized exceptions to the defense of charitable immunity. (Emphasis added.)
Id. at 548,
It was within this context that the Jones court made the following statement concerning corporate negligence and the Bost decision:
We conclude as defendant Hospital concluded in its brief: ... (3) the doctrine of corporate negligence, . . . adopted by this Court in Bost, is different in principle and in application from the limited doctrine of corporate negligence recognized in Rabón, and it should be applied prospectively, not retroactively.
Id. at 550,
The issue in the present case thus becomes: what did the Jones court intend when it stated that corporate negligence was to be applied “prospectively”? Put another way, corporate negligence is to be applied prospectively from what date? There are two possibilities: either 20 January 1967, the filing date of the Rabon decision or 5 February 1980, the filing date of the Bost decision. We interpret Jones to mean that corporate negligence is to be applied prospectively to causes of action arising after 20 January 1967, the date charitable immunity was abolished. We reach this decision based upon the following rationale.
First, Bost itself does not limit the application of the doctrine of corporate negligence to causes of action arising after 5 February 1980. In fact Bost acknowledges that the doctrine had been implicitly accepted and applied in a number of previous decisions.
Second, we find it significant that the date of the Bost decision is never mentioned in Jones — especially since the only date indicated as a benchmark of liability is 20 January 1967, the date of Rabon. We are confident that had the Jones court intended cor
Finally, a holding that the Jones court intended to apply the doctrine of corporate negligence only to causes of action arising subsequent to Bost would, in effect, resurrect until 1980 the doctrine of charitable immunity. Such a ruling would provide an anomalous result.
We further note that the precise issue before the Jones court was “whether, under the pre-Rabon cases, North Carolina recognized a doctrine of corporate negligence separate from the two well-recognized exceptions to the defense of charitable immunity.” (Emphasis added.)
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that Jones v. New Hanover Hospital,
Reversed and remanded.
